SOME CRITICAL NOTES ON Governance PDF
SOME CRITICAL NOTES ON Governance PDF
SOME CRITICAL NOTES ON Governance PDF
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modern view of politics which sees economy, state and society as dis-
tinct but largely coextensive systems of social organization. 13 With its
emphasis on multiple connections and networks, governance seems to
depart from this position. If the social sciences borrowed their metaphors
from physics and biology when advancing this modern view, then the
discourse on governance takes its language from more recent developments
in the bio-informational sciences. Drawing on the imagery of cybernetics
and complexity theory,14 governance presents a conceptual landscape of
self-regulating systems and proliferating networks. 15 Governance is
about managing networks.16 It is a continuous process of evolution, a
becoming that fluctuates between order and disorder.17 Governance takes
place within, and in relation to, networks presumed to have their own
autonomy and materiality.
A third feature of governance is its particular narrative of social change.
It is embedded in a discourse that now pervades the world of corporate, com-
mercial and public lifethe constantly reiterated claim that we inhabit a
world of accelerating change and complexity. This is the single premise
from which many studies of governance start.18 Put simply, the world has
become more complex and complicated. Never before has change come
so rapidly, on such a global scale, and with such global visibility.19 We face
growing complexity and continuing disaggregation.20
What is the source of this increasing complexity, this proliferation of organ-
izations and actors? What has made the world beyond the state so resistant
to hierarchical forms of rule? Common reference is made to such factors as the
massive growth of financial and other markets, information and communi-
cation revolutions, new forms of mass migration, and the end of
Communism. But equally important are political and cultural transformations
which are seen to give rise to concerns with equity, democracy, human rights,
environmentalism, regional, and local autonomy. As many see it, there has
been a cultural shift amongst the public who demand empowerment, choice,
and consultation. Against this backdrop there has been an organizational
explosion which is no less consequential than the population explosion.21
The final aspect of governance approaches that I want to highlight con-
cerns their view of the state. Governance theory resonates with a powerful
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had very little to say about what governments actually do.24 Second, gov-
ernance does this without recentring the state at a theoretical level. It avoids
the tendency which Foucault, among others, identifies; namely, over-valu-
ing the problem of the State, seeing it either as a monstre froid confronting
and dominating us, or as the essential and privileged fulfillment of a num-
ber of necessary social and economic functions.25 As a number of scholars
have noted, the image of the limited state standing apart from a largely
self-organizing civil society and economy may have been an enduring clas-
sical liberal image, but it is not an adequate concept for studying modern
power.26 Governance theory is to be commended for foregrounding the mul-
tiple ties which traverse this boundary, and the need to think about how such
relations might be subjected to accountability and democratic control.27
Rather than seeing them as complications for the state/society division, gov-
ernance sees them as the norm. Governance recognizes that private govern-
ment has insinuated the social body. It connects mainstream political science
to arguments that have long been made within feminism and Marxism: that
regulation operates in homes, firms, schools and many other sites beyond
the domain of institutional politics. By adopting the language of networks,
it helps to loosen the spell that the stateand its inside/outside,
centre/periphery image 28 has cast on political studies, enabling us to
glimpse the new topographies of political authority. Nowhere is this more
evident than in thinking about democracy and citizenship. Whereas such
questions have traditionally been posed within the framework of the nation-
state, governance allows a debate to take place in which questions of repre-
sentation, rights, and accountability can proceed at different political levels
and scales simultaneously. This is particularly the case with notions of cos-
mopolitan governance.29
Finally, as I have already hinted, governance signifies something of an
epistemological shift for political science. For too long now, liberal and
radical work on politics has been under the sway of what John Allen, fol-
lowing Bruno Latour, terms a centred view of power.30 Power is under-
stood as stored at particular institutional sites, such as economic corpora-
tions or state apparatuses. It is then exercised across a social field. By
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society, a strategy where the problems of the state (are) to rebound back
on to society, so that society is implicated in the task of resolving them,
where previously the state was expected to hand down an answer for soci-
etys needs.40 Importantly, Donzelot also observes that this formula only
comes into play under political and historical conditions where social con-
flicts no longer seem to threaten the structure of society. 41 In other words,
perhaps we can say that governance pertains to a political culture that no
longer sees itself at risk from fundamental class or geopolitical divisions,
where instead of threatening social order, social conflicts can now be har-
nessed to serve political ends.
The discourse of global governance exemplifies this assimilationist ten-
dency. It does not disregard the plight of the poor and the disenfranchised,
nor assume their predicament can be satisfactorily addressed with a formu-
la of more market. On the contrary, global governance often identifies
the fact of global poverty as something calling for political reform. However,
it is a narrow and tightly circumscribed form of political agency which gov-
ernance accords to its subjects. The poor are recognized as political subjects
only insofar as they might become responsible partners within the prolifer-
ating networks of governance. These groups are defined from the point
of view of their possible/potential inclusion within this system of self-
management. Governance discourse will not concede that its others may
have interests that are fundamentally incompatible or antagonistic to the pre-
sent order of power, that their exclusion is a structural effect rather than a
remediable anomaly, or that inclusion would imply a fundamental reorder-
ing of this system.
My argument is that governance discourse seeks to redefine the political
field in terms of a game of assimilation and integration. It displaces talk of
politics as struggle or conflict. It resonates with end of class and end of
history narratives in that it imagines a politics of multilevel collective self-
management, a politics without enemies. Yet governance is by no means
alone in this endeavour. On the contrary, it is consonant with some promi-
nent conceptual developments in other areas of the social sciences. We can
identify a genre of discourses which express a certain ambivalence towards
politics and which seek to sublimate political struggle in terms of visions of
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Conclusion: Other Forms of Power The problem with the language of gov-
ernance is not that it is wrong. It captures many novel and innovative aspects
of our present. One of its peculiar features, however, is its conceptual ambi-
guity and elasticity. One frequently encounters a strategic slippage such
that governance refers not merely to particular styles of coordination
marked by heterarchy, horizontality, partnership, etc.but instead, it comes
to stand as a more general account of the entire political structure. A good
example of this is the current trend to retheorize the European Union as a
multilevel system of governance. One gets the impression that the essence
of the EU is governance. This move casts the EU in a relatively favourable
lightas a consensus-oriented, problemsolving network-polity. For gover-
nance, as Marie-Claude Smouts points out, is not a neutral depiction of pol-
itics; rather, it offers an eirenic [sic] representation of social life. It disregards
the fight to the death, the phenomena of outright domination, and the prob-
lems that arise from the ungovernability of whole sections of international
society The underlying criterion of global governance is effectiveness: that
an issue be managed, a problem resolved; that there be an accommodation
of mutual interests.53
If we want to guard against this displacement of questions of power and
domination, then we need to do at least two things. First, we could be
more precise and use governance in a restricted fashion, reserving it to des-
ignate a specific style of rule and particular forms of coordination poli-
cy networks, regulation, indirect rule etc. . In addition, we should consider
alternative narratives. For instance, using the language of governance one can
certainly capture such aspects of the European Unions eastern enlargement
as its complex bargaining structures, or the role of soft governance.54 Yet
this governance picture will be incomplete. We need to combine and con-
front it with other analytical narratives. Here we might follow the lead of
recent studies which interrogate EU enlargement in terms of concepts of
empire and coloniality.55 This is not to suggest that the EU is repeating
the imperialism of the nineteenth century but it does bring to the fore emer-
gent relations of domination, tactics of control, and patterns of authority
that are missed by a framework of governance. Something similar is achieved
by Hardt and Negri when they displace the conventional globalization nar-
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rative, and its tale of declining political sovereignty, with a different narra-
tive of Empire. As they present it, Empire is a decentred and deterrito-
rializing apparatus of rule that progressively incorporates the entire global
realm within its open, expanding frontiers.56 Thus we are prompted to think
about the present in terms not simply of the inexorable spread of markets,
or the erosion of political power, but on the contrary, the crystallization of
a new global form of sovereignty.
The more general point here is that governance has become the new lin-
gua franca of the political and business establishments. Along with terms like
globalization and community, it belongs to a new planetary vulgate.57
The professionals of politics and gurus of innovation use it to describe and
rationalize what they do. Inasmuch as the language of governance allows
political science to speak to the world of business and policy, perhaps this
is a good thing, a marker of policy relevance; the downside is that a kind
of circularity is produced. Our capacity to make sense of the present is under-
mined if we are limited to describing it in its own terms. The value of words
like empire or coloniality is that they confront the political culture with
terms that are alien to it.58 They allow us to think and act differently. Nikolas
Rose has put it nicely: It is a matter of introducing a kind of awkwardness
into the fabric of ones experience, of interrupting the fluency of the narra-
tives that encode that experience and making them stutter.59 The task is
to decentre governance, to see it as a particular narrative about our pre-
sent, who we are, who we want to becomeand not a form of existence that
is simply given to us.
Notes
I would like to thank Knud Erik Jrgensen as well as the journals two
reviewers, all of whose remarks helped sharpen my argument. I am grateful
to Todd Alway for his invaluable editorial assistance. Research support for
this paper was provided by SSHRC (#410-2000-1415).
1. This literature is too vast to summarize here but key works and major overviews concerning
governance at a domestic level include Jan Kooiman, (ed.), Modern Governance (London: Sage,
1993); Jon Pierre, Debating Governance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000); R. Rhodes,
The New Governance: Governing without Government, Political Studies 44/4 (1996), pp.
653-667, and Gerry Stoker, Governance as Theory: Five Propositions, International Social
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Science Journal 50/155 (1998), pp. 187-195. On its use in international relations, often in
the form of global governance, see Aseem Prakash and Jeffrey A. Hart, (eds.), Globalization
and Governance (London: Routledge, 1999) and James Rosenau and Ernst-Otto Czempiel,
(eds.), Governance without Government: Order and Change in World Politics (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1992). Governance is also increasingly influential in theories of
European integration: see Simon Hix, The Study of the European Union II: The New
Governance Agenda and its Rivals, Journal of European Public Policy 5/1 (1998), pp. 38-65;
Markus Jachtenfuchs, The Governance Approach to European Integration, Journal of
Common Market Studies 39/2 (2001), pp. 245-264; Gary Marks, Liesbet Hooghe and Kermit
Blank, European Integration from the 1980s: State-Centric v. Multi-Level Governance,
Journal of Common Market Studies 34/3 (1996), pp. 341-78, and Gary Marks, Fritz W. Scharpf,
Philippe Schmitter and Wolfgang Streeck, Governance in the European Union (London: Sage,
1996).
2. More interdisciplinary in its approach, a growing Foucauldian literature on governmentali-
ty has developed within the English-speaking social sciences at approximately the same time
as governance. A discussion of their similarities and differences is beyond the scope of this
paper but others have already suggested how they might be compared. See, for example,
Nikolas Rose, Powers of Freedom: Reframing Political Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1999), pp. 15-24; Bob Jessop, The Regulation Approach, Governance and
Post-Fordism: Alternative Perspectives on Economic and Political Change, Economy and
Society 24/3 (1995), pp. 307-333, and Mitchell Deans discussion of reflexive government
in his Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society (London: Sage, 1999),Chapter 9.
3. Peter B. Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer and Theda Skocpol, (eds.), Bringing the State Back In
(Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1985).
4. Nikolas Rose, Powers of Freedom, p. 15.
5. Rhodes, The New Governance .
6. Jon Pierre, (ed.), Debating Governance: Authority, Steering, and Democracy (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000).
7. Bob Jessop, The Regulation Approach ; Bob Jessop, Capitalism and its Future: Remarks
on Regulation, Government and Governance, Review of International Political Economy 4/3
(1997), pp. 561-581; Bob Jessop, The Rise of Governance and the Risks of Failure: The Case
of Economic Development, International Social Sciences Journal 50/155 (1998), pp. 29-45.
8. Vincent Della Sala, Constitutionalizing Governance: Democratic Dead End or Dead on
Democracy? (Carleton University, Unpublished, 2001); Paul Hirst, Democracy and
Governance, in Pierre, (ed.), Debating Governance, pp. 13-35; Marie-Claude Smouts, The
Proper Use of Governance in International Relations, International Social Science Journal
50/155 (1998), pp. 81-89; Ian Robert Douglas, Globalization as Governance: Toward an
Archaeology of Contemporary Political Reason, in Aseem Prakash and Jeffrey A. Hart, (eds.),
Globalization and Governance (London: Routledge, 1999), pp. 134-160, and Anthony Pagden,
The Genesis of Governance and Enlightenment Conceptions of the Cosmopolitan World
Order, International Social Science Journal 50/155 (1998), pp. 7-15.
9. Smouts, The Proper Use .
10. Stoker, Governance as Theory , p. 17.
11. Commission for Global Governance, Our Global Neighbourhood: the Report of the Commission
on Global Governance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995).
12. B. G. Peters, Governance and Comparative Politics, in Jon Pierre, (ed.), Debating Governance
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 36-53.
13. Barry Hindess, Neoliberalism and the National Economy, in Mitchell Dean and Barry
Hindess, (eds.), Governing Australia; Studies in Contemporary Rationalities of Government
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 211-2.
14. Michael Dillon, Poststructuralism, Complexity and Poetics, Theory, Culture and Society 17/5
(2000), pp. 1-26; Nigel Thrift, The Place of Complexity, Theory, Culture & Society 16/3
(1999), pp. 31-69.
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15. James Rosenau, Governance in a Globalizing World, in David Held and Andrew McGrew,
(eds.), The Global Transformations Reader (Cambridge: Polity, 2000), p. 184.
16. Rhodes, The New Governance .
17. Rosenau, Governance in a Globalizing World, p. 185.
18. Smouts, The Proper Use, p. 84.
19. Commission for Global Governance, Our Global Neighbourhood.
20. Rosenau, Governance in a Globalizing World, p. 184.
21. Ibid., p. 183.
22. Tanja A. Brzel and Thomas Risse, Who is Afraid of a European Federation? How to
Constitutionalise a Multi-Level Governance System, Harvard Jean Monnet Working Paper No.
7/00 (2000), http://www.jeanmonnetprogram.org/papers/00/00f0101.html; Marks et al,
European Integration from the 1980s .
23. Jessop, Capitalism and its Future, p. 574.
24. Peters, Governance and Comparative Politics, p. 37.
25. Nikolas Rose and Peter Miller, Political Power beyond the State: Problematics of
Government, British Journal of Sociology 43/2 (1992), p. 174.
26. Hirst, Democracy and Governance; Timothy Mitchell, The Limits of the State: Beyond
Statist Approaches and their Critics, American Political Science Review 85/1 (1991), pp. 77-
94.
27. Hirst, Democracy and Governance, p. 22.
28. John A. Agnew, Timeless Space and State Centrism: The Geographical Assumptions of
International Relations Theory, in Stephen J. Rosow, Naeem Inayatullah and Mark Rupert,
(eds.), The Global Economy as Political Space (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 1994), pp. 87-
106; R. B. J. Walker, State Sovereignty and the Articulation of Political Space/Time,
Millennium 20/3 (1991), pp. 445-61.
29. David Held, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan
Governance (Cambridge: Polity, 1995); Daniele Archibugi, David Held and Martin Khler,
(eds.), Re-imagining Political Community: Studies in Cosmopolitan Democracy (Cambridge:
Polity, 1998).
30. John Allen, Spatial Assemblages of Power: From Domination to Empowerment, in Doreen
B. Massey, John Allen and Philip Sarre, (eds.), Human Geography Today (Malden, MA: Polity,
1999), pp. 194-218.
31. Bruno Latour, The Powers of Association, in John Law (ed.), Power, Action and Belief: A
New Sociology of Knowledge? (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986), pp. 264-280; Ash
Amin and Nigel Thrift, Institutional Issues for the European Regions: From Markets and
Plans to Socioeconomics and Powers of Association, Economy and Society 24/1 (1995), pp.
41-66.
32. Smouts, The Proper Use, p. 86.
33. Hirst, Democracy and Governance, p. 14.
34. Della Sala, Constitutionalizing Governance, p. 11.
35. Cynthia Hewitt de Alcntara, Uses and Abuses of the Concept of Governance, International
Social Sciences Journal 50/155 (1998), p. 105.
36. Ibid.
37. Commission for Global Governance, Our Global Neighbourhood.
38. Tim Plumpetre and John Graham, Governance in the New Millennium: Challenges for Canada
(Ottawa: The Institute on Governance, 2000), p. 3.
39. Notis Lebessis and John Paterson, Evolution in Governance: What Lessons for the
Commission? A First Assessment, European Commission, Forward Studies Unit. Working Paper
(1997).
40. Jacques Donzelot, The Mobilization of Society, in Graham Burchell, Colin Gordon and
Peter Miller, (eds.), The Foucault effect: studies in governmentality (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1991), p. 178.
41. Ibid., p. 177.
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42. For a critical discussion of this new political territory that he calls ethopolitics, see Nikolas
Rose, Inventiveness in Politics, Economy and Society 28/3 (1999), pp. 467-493; specifically
on social capital, see Michael W. Foley and Bob Edwards, Editors Introduction: Escape from
Politics? Social Theory and the Social Capital Debate, American Behavioral Scientist 40/5
(1997), pp. 550-561; and William Walters, Social Capital and Political Sociology: Re-imag-
ining Politics? Sociology 36 (2002), pp. 377-97.
43. Susan Strange, The Declining Authority of States, in David Held and Anthony McGrew,
(eds.), The Global Transformations Reader (Cambridge: Polity, 2000), p. 149.
44. Tony Cutler, Karel Williams and John Williams, Keynes, Beveridge and Beyond (London:
Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986).
45. See Grahame Thompson, The Evolution of the Managed Economy in Europe, Economy and
Society 21/2 (1992), pp. 129-151.
46. James Scott, Seeing like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition have
Failed (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998).
47. Rose and Miller, Political Power beyond the State.
48. Andrew Barry, Thomas Osborne and Nikolas Rose, Foucault and Political Reason: Liberalism,
Neo-liberalism, and Rationalities of Government (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996);
Graham Burchell, Colin Gordon and Peter Miller, The Foucault Effect: Studies in
Governmentality (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Rose and Miller, Political
Power Beyond the State .
49. Jan Kooiman, Societal Governance: Levels, Modes, and Orders of Social-Political Interaction,
in Jon Pierre, (ed.), Debating Governance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 139.
50. Margaret R. Somers and Gloria D. Gibson, Reclaiming the Epistemological Other: Narrative
and the Social Constitution of Identity, in Craig Calhoun, (ed.), Social Theory and the Politics
of Identity (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1994), p. 63.
51. Herbert Gottweis, Regulating Genetic Engineering in the European Union: A Post-
Structuralist Perspective, in Beate Kohler-Koch and Rainer Eising, (eds.), The Transformation
of Governance in the European Union (London: Routledge, 1999), p. 64.
52. Kooiman, Societal Governance, p. 139.
53. Smouts, The Proper Use, p. 88.
54. Lykke Friis and Anna Murphy, The European Union and Central and Eastern Europe:
Governance and Boundaries, Journal of Common Market Studies 37/2 (1999), pp. 211-232.
55. Jzsef Brcz and Melinda Kovcs, (eds.), Empires New Clothes: Unveiling EU Enlargement
(Telford, UK: Central Europe Review, 2001), http://www.mirhouse.com/ce-review/
Empire.pdf.; Ole Waever, Imperial Metaphors: Emerging European Analogies to Pre-Nation-
State Imperial Systems, in Ola Tunander et al, (eds.), Geopolitics in post-Wall Europe: Security,
Territory and Identity (London: Sage, 1997).
56. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000),
p. xii. Emphasis in the original.
57. Pierre Bourdieu and Loic Wacquant, NewLiberalSpeak: Notes on the New Planetary Vulgate,
Radical Philosophy 105 (2001), http://www.radicalphilosophy.com/ default.asp?channel_id
=2187& editorial_id =9956
58. But note the elasticity and flexibility of the dominant political culture and its capacity to recu-
perate and reverse critical terms. With the US-UK led invasion and occupation of Iraq, we
find public intellectuals like Michael Ignatieff and Niall Ferguson seeking to rehabilitate and
affirm a certain idea of empire in order to rationalize US foreign policy.
59. Rose, Powers of Freedom, p. 20.
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